Category Archives: Documentary

2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: HALE COUNTY THIS MORNING, THIS EVENING

Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by IDIOM Film/RaMell Ross

HALE COUNTY THIS MORNING, THIS EVENING
RaMell Ross rewrites familiar representational tropes of race, region, and class in this impressionistic portrait of two young African American men in the American South.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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On TV: THIS IS BOB HOPE…

Coming to PBS’s American Masters in an unabridged director’s cut tomorrow, Friday, December 29:
THIS IS BOB HOPE…

Director:
John Scheinfeld

Premiere:
American Masters (Nov 2017, abridged version)

About:
An in-depth look at the life and eight-decade career of the comedian and performer.

Popular across a broad spectrum of entertainment, from his early years in vaudeville through popular music, radio, stage, and screen, Bob Hope happily lived most of his 100 years in the public spotlight before his death in 2003. Once a cutting edge comic talent, he was viewed as old-fashioned by the 1970s, and fell out of favor. Scheinfeld’s affectionate portrait reminds audiences of his prodigious comic abilities and showmanship, drawing from Hope’s personal archives as well as a wealth of performance footage and interviews with family members and celebrity friends and fans like Billy Crystal, Conan O’Brien, and Margaret Cho. The well-constructed and comprehensive film details Hope’s rise to stardom, buoyed by his popular song “Thanks for the Memories,” and his lasting contributions to comedy, including his development of the topical monologue and conversational humor that influenced generations of stand-ups. In addition, Scheinfeld explores Hope’s charity work and long association with the USO, providing entertainment to military audiences for decades – and, in the case of his appearances during the Vietnam War, painting him as a hawk politically, further underlining that he was out of touch with younger audiences. Still, as demonstrated in the ample examples here, there’s no denying Hope’s talent.

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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: HAL

Courtesy of Sundance Institute

HAL
Amy Scott celebrates maverick director Hal Ashby.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: THE DEVIL WE KNOW

Courtesy of Sundance Institute

THE DEVIL WE KNOW
Stephanie Soechtig and co-director Jeremy Seifert uncover a corporation’s widespread use of dangerous chemicals, despite their known impact on human health.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition

Special Program:
The New Climate
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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: DARK MONEY

Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Eric Phillips-Horst

DARK MONEY
Kimberly Reed reveals the dangerous impact of Citizens United on Montana’s politics.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: CRIME + PUNISHMENT

Courtesy of Sundance Institute


CRIME + PUNISHMENT
Stephen Maing chronicles the efforts of whistleblowing police officers to expose a corrupt NYPD.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus: BISBEE ’17

Courtesy of Sundance Institute | photo by Jarred Alterman/4th Row Films

BISBEE ’17
Robert Greene confronts a dark episode in a small border town’s history, 100 years later.

Festival Section:
US Documentary Competition
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2018 Sundance Docs in Focus

The 34th Sundance Film Festival takes place next month, running January 18-28, with a lineup consisting of 121 features, 69 shorts, and 24 installations, performances, AI, and VR experiences.

For the past seven years, I’ve profiled the feature documentary programming in advance of the festival, offering background about the exciting new crop of films. My 2018 lineup focus begins tomorrow with the US Documentary Competition and will continue film-by-film, section-by-section, until I’ve covered the more than 50 nonfiction titles this year, wrapping up just before the festival starts.

Please note that I am not reviewing these films – as a Documentary Programming Associate for Sundance, they are all recommended. These profiles simply include select background about the filmmakers, noting past Sundance projects where applicable, and why readers should seek out the docs, either during the festival or later in the year at other upcoming festivals and/or in release. For a sample, check out last year’s series, which began here.

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On TV: DEEJ

Coming to PBS’s America ReFramed for an encore screening tonight, Tuesday, December 26:
DEEJ

Director:
Robert Rooy

Premiere:
Woods Hole 2017

Select Festivals:
Newburyport, Superfest, Chagrin Doc

About:
A non-verbal autistic man pushes for inclusion as he pursues higher education.

As a young child, DJ Savarese was abandoned by his birth parents, faced abuse in foster care, and was too-readily dismissed as a lost cause. His adoptive parents disagreed, insisting on mainstreaming him in school, and providing the necessary tools to help him communicate and thrive. Rooy follows Deej and his parents over several years as the young man completes high school and begins his college studies, gaining acceptance at Oberlin, his first choice. Speaking through a computer-aided device, Deej, who takes a producer credit here, emerges as an advocate for disability awareness and inclusion, while also sharing his writing, with themes of isolation and his desire for, yet fears about, independence from his parents.

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In Theatres: A GERMAN LIFE

Coming to theatres today, Friday, December 22:
A GERMAN LIFE

Directors:
Christian Krönes, Florian Weigensamer, Olaf Müller, and Roland Schrotthofer

Premiere:
Visions du Réel 2016

Select Festivals:
Munich, Jerusalem, DMZ, Docslisboa, Docpoint, Zagreb Dox, One World, It’s All True, CNEX Doc, Bergen, Jewish fests in San Francisco, UK, Washington, and Barcelona

About:
Joseph Goebbel’s secretary looks back on her life.

In Krönes, Weigensamer, Müller, and Schrotthofer’s captivating portrait, Brunhilde Pomsel is presented in stark black and white, her wrinkled face framed in close-up, underlining her 103 years, as she recounts how she came to work for the notorious Nazi Propaganda Minister. Intercut with these reflections are quotations from Goebbels and footage from the period produced by both Germany and Allied forces. Pomsel notes that she was apolitical and, beyond that, “one of the cowards,” and that, despite what viewers might want to think about themselves, they too would likely have complied rather than resisted when faced with the Nazi regime. At the same time, Pomsel offers contradictory views about what she did and didn’t know about the actions of the Nazi high command for which she worked – she claims not to know what was being done to the Jews in concentration camps, but her friendship with a Jewish friend who suffered under the Nazis is a recurrent thread here. Still, the filmmakers aren’t engaged in some kind of trial here – instead, they allow the centenarian’s words to underscore the human costs of compliance and expose the moral complicity in unquestioningly permitting hatred and persecution to become the new normal.

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